User Tips for FM Operating

Be sure the frequency (or “channel”) is not busy before you transmit. How would you like it if someone interrupted your conversation? Please don’t interrupt an on-going conversation.

User Tip: when you turn to a repeater or a simplex frequency, listen for at least thirty (30) seconds before transmitting.

Be sure to learn the usage, protocol and/or policies of repeaters you are using. Just because a repeater is “there” does not mean that you are welcome to switch to it and use it for long, extended rag-chews. Some repeaters welcome newcomers, some do not. A sensible person does not want to spend time where they are not welcome. Even though your license allows you to operate on any frequency within the bounds of your license class, a wise amateur avoids “closed or private” repeaters, and repeaters that are operated by small, unfriendly groups.

User Tip: listen to a repeater for a while before you make a decision to use it. You might even ask someone on the repeater if you are welcome to use it for occasional conversations.

Using Q-signals too often is bad form. Although Q-signals have a very valuable place in Amateur Radio, they are not universally accepted on FM voice channels. Using them during EVERY TRANSMISSION is really annoying.

User Tip: use Q-signals sparingly.Once in a while. Not very often.

Using the phrase “clear and monitoring” is not really necessary. Neither term is required by the FCC or anybody else. If you call another amateur, using their call sign and yours, and that person does not answer, it is not necessary to advise “clear and monitoring.” You have already identified your station and any other identification is superfluous.

User Tip: Under normal circumstances, when you are finished with a contact but will continue listening, it is sufficient to merely say your call sign.If you are shutting down operation and will not be there to answer any subsequent calls, then “clear’ is the appropriate sign-off.

User Tip #2: If you attempt to contact someone and there is no answer, you can notify others that you are finished by saying, “K6xxx clear,” or “no contact, this is K6xxx clear the WIN System repeater.”This allows someone who may have been standing by to go ahead and make his or her call.

Using the term “for ID” is not necessary. There should be no reason to transmit your call sign other thanto identify your station. Identification is required every 10 minutes during a conversation, and at the end of a conversation or series of communications. Conversations need not come to a halt while you identify. “Stand by, everyone, while I say my call sign.” Simply say your call sign once within 10 minutes.

User Tip: while talking, say your call sign once every ten minutes. Don’t say “This is K6xxx for ID, or worse, for identification.” Also, don’t say “This is K6xxx for license preservation purposes.”Identify properly, but do not over-identify.

Long ago, FCC rules required mobile hams to not only say their call sign, but to say where they were operating, giving both the city and the call sign area. You may hear some hams saying, “…mobile 6” or “…mobile 3” after their call sign. This means that they are operating “mobile, in call sign area 6” or “mobile, in call sign area 3.” This is no longer required but it is sometimes good to know. When leaving their home state, some hams will keep track of what call sign area they are in, and say, “…mobile 7,” or “…mobile 1,” or whatever.

User Tip: it’s not necessary, but it’s not wrong.

Certain types of jargon are easily recognizable as being “CB” terms. “What is your first personal?” when you mean “what is your name?” “I’m on the side,” when you mean you are “listening” or “monitoring.” Although there is nothing “wrong” with CB, these terms are neither generally used nor appreciated on Amateur Radio frequencies.

User Tip: avoid CB-style jargon and terms.Generally speaking, plain English is better. For example: “my name is Shorty, what is yours?”

Different repeater groups handle emergency communications in different ways. A general guideline is this: if you are on an unfamiliar repeater and you have emergency traffic, say so! Example: “Can someone help me contact the Highway Patrol?” or “I need help contacting the Fire Department. Asking “is anybody monitoring?” may sound like an attempt to start a casual conversation. On many repeaters, you could be ignored. However, if you state that you have emergency traffic, people on many repeaters will drop what they are doing to help you. Note: if you are monitoring a repeater and someone asks for emergency assistance and you cannot help, BE SILENT! There are few things stupider than someone breaking in to say that they would help except that they forgot the codes, or that they left their radio with the DTMF pad at home, or that their home phone is busy so they can’t make the call for you.

User Tips:

If you have emergency traffic, say so immediately.

If you can help, please do.

If you cannot help, do not transmit.

In this day of scanners, scanning mobile radios, scanning portable radios, dual-, triple- and quadruple band radios, and multiple radios in the car or shack, you could miss making contact with someone because your radio is scanning several channels or bands. If you know that the person you are calling is sitting next to the radio waiting for you, you can make your call very simple: say their call, then your own. However, if your friend has a scanning radio, or listens to several radios, it is very possible that they could miss your call. You should call twice: say the other station’s call twice, then your own call sign once. Pause for a half-minute or so and try again. It might also be a good idea to try again in 4 or 5 minutes, in case the called person’s scanner was stopping on a long, drawn-out conversation. And if you know that the called station is listening to more than one frequency, you can call and say “on The WIN System” to give them a hint as to which microphone to pick up or which band to select.

User Tip: call twice.

You may hear people using the term “73”meaning “best wishes.” There is no “s” in the salutation “73.” Other hams may use the term “88” meaning “love and kisses” typically used between husbands and wives. These shortcuts were developed years ago as a way to communicate common thoughts quickly. You may hear others saying “73s” and “88s”(wrong!) You might even hear someone saying [cringe!] “threes and eights and all those good numbers!” Yecch!

User Tips:Proper usage would be similar to this:

Voice: “OK, Dan, seven-three and I will talk to you later. (pause) K6JSI.”

Voice: “73 for now, K6JSI clear.”

CW: “W2EOS de K6JSI CUL OM 73 SK.”

CW: “N6xxx de K6xxx 73 88 SK.”

There is no specific requirement for keeping logs of the use of your amateur radio station, except for International Third-party Traffic. However, a good way to keep track of your communications is to use a Log Book, available at some amateur radio dealers.

User Tip:One method is this: make an entry in the “date” column for each day you operate your station. Each time you contact a “new” station, make entries for call sign, name, frequency, mode and any other information you think necessary or interesting. You probably have no need to make log entries for people you talk to every day, with the possible exception of logging emergency traffic that you may handle for others.

Sometimes while talking to another station, it is necessary to ask the other person to “stand by.” This may be caused by (a) a driving situation needing immediate attention to avert a crash, (b) a spouse or child walking into the “shack” with a message, (c) placing your order at a drive-up window, etc. The proper response, when requested to “stand by,” is silence. Generally it will only take a moment and the other station will be back. If you really feel it necessary to say something, then say, “[call sign] standing by.” If you respond to “stand by” with a long, drawn-out acknowledgement, it serves no purpose and the person asking you to “stand by” is probably not listening anyway.

One of the most important things for new hams to learn is to “K-H-T.” That is “key, hesitate, talk.” You must consciously learn to push the microphone button, pause slightly, and then begin speaking. If you push the button and speak simultaneously, the first word or the first part of a word may be cut off. This does not facilitate effective communications. Hopefully, if you learn to do it correctly from the first day, it will become subconscious and you will do it automatically. If this is the case, you will earn the respect and admiration of your peers. If not, you will be forever labeled as a sub-standard operator.

Try to keep your language polite. Profanity and discussions of bodily functions should be off limits – not because of government rules, but because it’s the right thing to do. Generally, other hams and their family members do not want to hear conversations that are not of the “G-rated” variety.

Keep in mind that when you are operating in a noisy environment, you do not have to be able to hear yourself talking. There will be those instances where you are helping with emergency communications for a disaster, or communications support for a parade, or you are at an airport or other noisy place. If you shout into the microphone loud enough to hear yourself, you are distorting the signal so badly that the person on the other end may not be able to hear or understand you. Instead, practice speaking into the microphone in a normal tone. It can be very difficult to operate under these conditions (loud background noise), but it is a skill that you would do well to learn.